Parliamentary scepticism on insurance co-regulation
The voluntary approach to industry self-regulation in the life insurance are not working, according to the Parliamentary Committee on Corporations and Financial Services.
The Committee’s report on the Life Insurance industry has expressed a low level of confidence in the co-regulatory approach being pursued by the Financial Services Council (FSC) via its Life Insurance Code of Conduct and the Insurance inside Superannuation Code of Conduct.
“The committee has considered the current self-regulatory approach adopted by the Financial Services Council and the Insurance in Superannuation Working Group,” the report said. “The committee is not persuaded that the current voluntary approaches to industry self-regulation put forward by the Financial Services Council and Insurance in Superannuation Working Group are sufficient to deter misconduct and address the poor practices that have become all too prevalent in the life insurance industry.”
The report said that the committee had also noted that previous self-regulatory codes in the life insurance industry had fallen into disuse.
“The committee considers that it would be unacceptable for such a situation to recur,” it said.
The report said that, in light of this, the committee was persuaded that co-regulation would have greater potential to foster best-practice in the life insurance industry and, as a consequence, help restore much-needed consumer confidence in the sector.
“In particular, the committee considers that, with respect to the life insurance industry, a co-regulatory approach must, at a minimum, deliver a code that:
- is written in plain English that regulates the conduct of life insurance companies in assessing claims;
- is mandatory for all industry participants;
- is registered with ASIC;
- is enforceable in order to create accountability; and
- provides genuine remedies for its breach, including financial remedies,
thereby creating an incentive for compliance.
Recommended for you
Financial Services Minister Stephen Jones has shared further details on the second tranche of the Delivering Better Financial Outcomes reforms including modernising best interests duty and reforming Statements of Advice.
The Federal Court has found a company director guilty of operating unregistered managed investment schemes and carrying on a financial services business without holding an AFSL.
The Governance Institute has said ASIC’s governance arrangements are no longer “fit for purpose” in a time when financial markets are quickly innovating and cyber crime becomes a threat.
Compliance professionals working in financial services are facing burnout risk as higher workloads, coupled with the ever-changing regulation, place notable strain on staff.